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Soups and Sauces

Soups and Sauces. Soups and Sauces. I. Classification of soups A. Thin soups. Soups and Sauces. I. Classification of soups A. Thin soups 1. Broth and bouillon Simple clear soup without solid ingredients Broth is a by product of simmering meat or poultry. Soups and Sauces.

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Soups and Sauces

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  1. Soups and Sauces

  2. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups

  3. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups • 1. Broth and bouillon • Simple clear soup without solid ingredients • Broth is a by product of simmering meat or poultry

  4. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups • 2. Consommé

  5. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups • 2. Consommé • A rich flavorful stock or broth that has been clarified to be clear and transparent • Strong and flavorful

  6. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups • 2. Consommé • 3. Clear vegetable

  7. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups • 2. Consommé • 3. Clear vegetable • a clear seasoned stock with the addition of one or more vegetables (meat or poultry may be added)

  8. Soups and Sauces • I. Classification of soups • A. Thin soups • 2. Consommé • 3. Clear vegetable • 4. Clarification • Process of clarifying a stock to produce a consume

  9. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • Opaque not transparent, they are thickened either by adding a thickening agent or pureeing one or more of the ingredients

  10. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux is a mixture of equal parts flour and fat (usually butter). They are stirred constantly over heat to form either a white, blonde, or brown roux.

  11. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux • b. Beurre maine equal parts soft raw butter and flour formed into balls. Should be done as a finishing, stir into cook flour butter will give sauce flavor and sheen.

  12. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux • b. Beurre maine • c. Liaison egg yolks and heavy cream used for finishing more than thickening

  13. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux • b. Beurre maine • c. Liaison • d. Cornstarch

  14. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux • b. Beurre maine • c. Liaison • d. Cornstarch • e. Arrowroot

  15. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux • b. Beurre maine • c. Liaison • d. Cornstarch • e. Arrowroot • . “White wash”

  16. Soups and Sauces • B. Thick soups • 1. Thickening agents and techniques • a. Roux • b. Beurre maine • c. Liaison • d. Cornstarch • e. Arrowroot • . “White wash” • g. Other vegetable starches

  17. h. How starches work • Starches thicken by gelatinization • The starch granules absorb liquid and swell to many time there original size • Granules must be separated or lumps will form (outer granules will gelatinize trapping inner granules in a lump) • Two ways • mixing the starch with a fat • Dissolving in a cold liquid

  18. Emulsification • Done with egg yolks • A uniform mixture of two unmixable liquids. • In the case of hollandaise water and butter • The two stay mixed and thick because the butter is beaten into tiny droplets and the egg yolks hold them apart

  19. Reduction • Slowly simmering away the liquid leaving a bold intense flavor

  20. C. Hearty soups • 1. Gumbo

  21. C. Hearty soups • 1. Gumbo • 2. Chili

  22. C. Hearty soups • 1. Gumbo • 2. Chili • 3. Vegetable

  23. D. Cream soups and chowders • Could be made from a watered down cream sauce • Name after main ingredient • Chowders usually seafood or vegetable • Usually made with milk

  24. E. Purées • One or more of the ingredients are pureed to thicken soup. • May be strained but not necessary

  25. F. Specialty soups • These are soups that do not easily fit into other classifications

  26. 1. Ethnic and regional • Soups that are generally associated with certain etnic groups or geographical areas

  27. 2. Cold soups • a. Cucumber • b. Gazpacho • c. Consommé • d. Potato • e. Borscht • f. Fruit

  28. G. Finishing soups • . Garnishing and enrichment • Use appropriate garnish for each soup • Something light and colorful • Added at end to float on top • Do not let it sink • Do not let it become soggy

  29. G. Finishing soups • . Garnishing and enrichment • . Using base to replace or enhance stock

  30. G. Finishing soups • . Garnishing and enrichment • . Using base to replace or enhance stock • Follow instructions on base use proper ratio • Taste and reduce if necessary

  31. G. Finishing soups • . Garnishing and enrichment • . Using base to replace or enhance stock • Cooling, storing and reheating procedures • Use ice bath to quickly cool • Do not burn when reheating

  32. Sauces • Liquid + thickening agent = leading sauce • Sauce = additional flavorings = small sauce

  33. II. Classification of hot sauces • A. The five mother sauces • 1. Espagnole • Brown stock plus brown roux

  34. II. Classification of hot sauces • A. The five mother sauces • 1. Espagnole • 2. Béchamel • Milk and white roux

  35. II. Classification of hot sauces • A. The five mother sauces • 1. Espagnole • 2. Béchamel • 3. Veloute • White stock plus white or blonde roux

  36. II. Classification of hot sauces • A. The five mother sauces • 1. Espagnole • 2. Béchamel • 3. Veloute • 4. Tomato • Tomato plus stock (roux may be optional)

  37. II. Classification of hot sauces • A. The five mother sauces • 1. Espagnole • 2. Béchamel • 3. Veloute • 4. Tomato • 5. Hollandaise • Butter plus eggs

  38. B. About hot sauces • 1. Derivative (small) sauces

  39. 1. Derivative (small) sauces • 2. Common small sauces • a.From hollandaise/bernaise • 1) Maltaise (blood oranges) • 2) Mousseline (unsweetened whipped cream) • 3) Choron (béarnaise with tomato)

  40. 1. Derivative (small) sauces • 2. Common small sauces • a.From hollandaise/bernaise • b.From brown stock to jus lié or espagnole • 1) Demiglaze • 2) Bordelaise (marrow) • 3) Chasseur (mushrooms and tomato) • 4) Robert (white wine, lemon juice and mustard) • 5) Marchand de vin (red wine and shallots)

  41. 1. Derivative (small) sauces • 2. Common small sauces • a.From hollandaise/bernaise • b.From brown stock to jus lié or espagnole • c.From velouté (velvet) sauce • 1) Supreme (with heavy cream) • 2) Allemande (supreme and liaison) • 3) Aurora (supreme and tomato)

  42. 1. Derivative (small) sauces • 2. Common small sauces • a.From hollandaise/bernaise • b.From brown stock to jus lié or espagnole • c.From velouté (velvet) sauce • d.From béchamel • 1) Cream sauce (heavy cream, nutmeg) • 2) Mornay (Gruyére or other Swiss cheese) • 3) Cheddar sauce (cheddar cheese) • 4) Alfredo sauce (Parmesan cheese, garlic and pepper) • 5) Nantua (crayfish or shrimp butter and heavy cream)

  43. 3. Choosing and using a hot sauce

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